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MediaSPIP Simple : futur thème graphique par défaut ?
26 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
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avec chosen
13 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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sans chosen
13 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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config chosen
13 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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SPIP - plugins - embed code - Exemple
2 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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GetID3 - Bloc informations de fichiers
9 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
Autres articles (27)
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Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...) -
Supporting all media types
13 avril 2011, parUnlike most software and media-sharing platforms, MediaSPIP aims to manage as many different media types as possible. The following are just a few examples from an ever-expanding list of supported formats : images : png, gif, jpg, bmp and more audio : MP3, Ogg, Wav and more video : AVI, MP4, OGV, mpg, mov, wmv and more text, code and other data : OpenOffice, Microsoft Office (Word, PowerPoint, Excel), web (html, CSS), LaTeX, Google Earth and (...)
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Emballe médias : à quoi cela sert ?
4 février 2011, parCe plugin vise à gérer des sites de mise en ligne de documents de tous types.
Il crée des "médias", à savoir : un "média" est un article au sens SPIP créé automatiquement lors du téléversement d’un document qu’il soit audio, vidéo, image ou textuel ; un seul document ne peut être lié à un article dit "média" ;
Sur d’autres sites (4086)
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CCPA vs GDPR : Understanding Their Impact on Data Analytics
19 mars, par Alex CarmonaWith over 400 million internet users in Europe and 331 million in the US (11% of which reside in California alone), understanding the nuances of privacy laws like the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is crucial for compliant and ethical consumer data collection.
Navigating this compliance landscape can be challenging for businesses serving European and Californian markets.
This guide explores the key differences between CCPA and GDPR, their impact on data analytics, and how to ensure your business meets these essential privacy requirements.
What is the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) ?
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is a data privacy law that gives California consumers control over their personal information. It applies to for-profit businesses operating in California that meet specific criteria related to revenue, data collection and sales.
Origins and purpose
The CCPA addresses growing concerns about data privacy and how businesses use personal information in California. The act passed in 2018 and went into effect on 1 January 2020.
Key features
- Grants consumers the right to know what personal information is collected
- Provides the right to delete personal information
- Allows consumers to opt out of the sale of their personal information
- Prohibits discrimination against consumers who exercise their CCPA rights
Key definitions under the CCPA framework
- Business : A for-profit entity doing business in California and meeting one or more of these conditions :
- Has annual gross revenues over $25 million ;
- Buys, receives, sells or shares 50,000 or more consumers’ personal information ; or
- Derives 50% or more of its annual revenues from selling consumers’ personal information
- Consumer : A natural person who is a California resident
- Personal Information : Information that could be linked to, related to or used to identify a consumer or household, such as online identifiers, IP addresses, email addresses, social security numbers, cookie identifiers and more
What is the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) ?
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a data privacy and protection law passed by the European Union (EU). It’s one of the strongest and most influential data privacy laws worldwide and applies to all organisations that process the personal data of individuals in the EU.
Origins and purpose
The GDPR was passed in 2016 and went into effect on 25 May 2018. It aims to harmonise data privacy laws in Europe and give people in the European Economic Area (EEA) privacy rights and control over their data.
Key features
- Applies to all organisations that process the personal data of individuals in the EEA
- Grants individuals a wide range of privacy rights over their data
- Requires organisations to obtain explicit and informed consent for most data processing
- Mandates appropriate security measures to protect personal data
- Imposes significant fines and penalties for non-compliance
Key definitions under the GDPR framework
- Data Subject : An identified or identifiable person
- Personal Data : Any information relating to a data subject
- Data Controller : The entity or organisation that determines how personal data is processed and what for
- Data Processor : The entity or organisation that processes the data on behalf of the controller
CCPA vs. GDPR : Key similarities
The CCPA and GDPR enhance consumer privacy rights and give individuals greater control over their data.
Dimension CCPA GDPR Purpose Protect consumer privacy Protect individual data rights Key Rights Right to access, delete and opt out of sale Right to access, rectify, erase and restrict processing Transparency Requires transparency around data collection and use Requires transparency about data collection, processing and use CCPA vs. GDPR : Key differences
While they have similar purposes, the CCPA and GDPR differ significantly in their scope, approach and specific requirements.
Dimension CCPA GDPR Scope For-profit businesses only All organisations processing EU consumer data Territorial Reach California-based natural persons All data subjects within the EEA Consent Opt-out system Opt-in system Penalties Per violation based on its intentional or negligent nature Case-by-case based on comprehensive assessment Individual Rights Narrower (relative to GDPR) Broader (relative to CCPA) CCPA vs. GDPR : A multi-dimensional comparison
The previous sections gave a broad overview of the similarities and differences between CCPA and GDPR. Let’s now examine nine key dimensions where these regulations converge or diverge and discuss their impact on data analytics.
#1. Scope and territorial reach
The GDPR has a much broader scope than the CCPA. It applies to all organisations that process the personal data of individuals in the EEA, regardless of their business model, purpose or physical location.
The CCPA applies to medium and large for-profit businesses that derive a substantial portion of their earnings from selling Californian consumers’ personal information. It doesn’t apply to non-profits, government agencies or smaller for-profit companies.
Impact on data analytics
The difference in scope significantly impacts data analytics practices. Smaller businesses may not need to comply with either regulation, some may only need to follow the CCPA, while most global businesses must comply with both. This often requires different methods for collecting and processing data in California, Europe, and elsewhere.
#2. Penalties and fines for non-compliance
Both the CCPA and GDPR impose penalties for non-compliance, but the severity of fines differs significantly :
CCPA Maximum penalty $2,500 per unintentional violation
$7,500 per intentional violation“Per violation” means per violation per impacted consumer. For example, three intentional CCPA violations affecting 1,000 consumers would result in 3,000 total violations and a $22.5 million maximum penalty (3,000 × $7,500).
The largest CCPA fine to date was Zoom’s $85 million settlement in 2021.
In contrast, the GDPR has resulted in 2,248 fines totalling almost €6.6 billion since 2018 — €2.4 billion of which were for non-compliance.
GDPR Maximum penalty €20 million or
4% of all revenue earned the previous yearSo far, the biggest fine imposed under the GDPR was Meta’s €1.2 billion fine in May 2023 — 15 times more than Zoom had to pay California.
Impact on data analytics
The significant difference in potential fines demonstrates the importance of regulatory compliance for data analytics professionals. Non-compliance can have severe financial consequences, directly affecting budget allocation and business operations.
Businesses must ensure their data collection, storage and processing practices comply with regulations in both Europe and California.
Choosing privacy-first, compliance-ready analytics platforms like Matomo is instrumental for mitigating non-compliance risks.
#3. Data subject rights and consumer rights
The CCPA and GDPR give people similar rights over their data, but their limitations and details differ.
Rights common to the CCPA and GDPR
- Right to Access/Know : People can access their personal information and learn what data is collected, its source, its purpose and how it’s shared
- Right to Delete/Erasure : People can request the deletion of their personal information, with some exceptions
- Right to Non-Discrimination : Businesses can’t discriminate against people who exercise their privacy rights
Consumer rights unique to the CCPA
- Right to Opt Out of Sale : Consumers can prohibit the sale of their personal information
- Right to Notice : Businesses must inform consumers about data collection practices
- Right to Disclosure : Consumers can request specific information collected about them
Data subject rights unique to the GDPR
- Right to be Informed : Broader transparency requirements encompass data retention, automated decision-making and international transfers
- Right to Rectification : Data subjects may request the correction of inaccurate data
- Right to Restrict Processing : Consumers may limit data use in certain situations
- Right to Data Portability : Businesses must provide individual consumer data in a secure, portable format when requested
- Right to Withdraw Consent : Consumers may withdraw previously granted consent to data processing
CCPA GDPR Right to Access or Know ✓ ✓ Right to Delete or Erase ✓ ✓ Right to Non-Discrimination ✓ ✓ Right to Opt-Out ✓ Right to Notice ✓ Right to Disclosure ✓ Right to be Informed ✓ Right to Rectification ✓ Right to Restrict Processing ✓ Right to Data Portability ✓ Right to Withdraw Consent ✓ Impact on data analytics
Data analysts must understand these rights and ensure compliance with both regulations, which could potentially require separate data handling processes for EU and California consumers.
#4. Opt-out vs. opt-in
The CCPA generally follows an opt-out model, while the GDPR requires explicit consent from individuals before processing their data.
Impact on data analytics
For CCPA compliance, businesses can collect data by default if they provide opt-out mechanisms. Failing to process opt-out requests can result in severe penalties, like Sephora’s $1.2 million fine.
Under GDPR, organisations must obtain explicit consent before collecting any data, which can limit the amount of data available for analysis.
#5. Parental consent
The CCPA and GDPR have provisions regarding parental consent for processing children’s data. The CCPA requires parental consent for children under 13, while the GDPR sets the age at 16, though member states can lower it to 13.
Impact on data analytics
This requirement significantly impacts businesses targeting younger audiences. In Europe and the US, companies must implement different methods to verify users’ ages and obtain parental consent when necessary.
The California Attorney General’s Office recently fined Tilting Point Media LLC $500,000 for sharing children’s data without parental consent.
#6. Data security requirements
Both regulations require businesses to implement adequate security measures to protect personal data. However, the GDPR has more prescriptive requirements, outlining specific security measures and emphasising a risk-based approach.
Impact on data analytics
Data analytics professionals must ensure that data is processed and stored securely to avoid breaches and potential fines.
#7. International data transfers
Both the CCPA and GDPR address international data transfers. Under the CCPA, businesses must only inform consumers about international transfers. The GDPR has stricter requirements, including ensuring adequate data protection safeguards for transfers outside the EEA.
Other rules, like the Payment Services Directive 2 (PSD2), also affect international data transfers, especially in the financial industry.
PSD2 requires strong customer authentication and secure communication channels for payment services. This adds complexity to cross-border data flows.
Impact on data analytics
The primary impact is on businesses serving European residents from outside Europe. Processing data within the European Union is typically advisable. Meta’s record-breaking €1.2 billion fine was specifically for transferring data from the EEA to the US without sufficient safeguards.
Choosing the right analytics platform helps avoid these issues.
For example, Matomo offers a free, open-source, self-hosted analytics platform you can deploy anywhere. You can also choose a managed, GDPR-compliant cloud analytics solution with all data storage and processing servers within the EU (in Germany), ensuring your data never leaves the EEA.
#8. Enforcement mechanisms
The California Attorney General is responsible for enforcing CCPA requirements, while in Europe, the Data Protection Authority (DPA) in each EU member state enforces GDPR requirements.
Impact on data analytics
Data analytics professionals should be familiar with their respective enforcement bodies and their powers to support compliance efforts and minimise the risk of fines and penalties.
#9. Legal basis for personal data processing
The GDPR outlines six legal grounds for processing personal data :
- Consent
- Contract
- Legal obligation
- Vital interests
- Public task
- Legitimate interests
The CCPA doesn’t explicitly define lawful bases but focuses on consumer rights and transparency in general.
Impact on data analytics
Businesses subject to the GDPR must identify and document a valid lawful basis for each processing activity.
Compliance rules under CCPA and GDPR
Complying with the CCPA and GDPR requires a comprehensive approach to data privacy. Here’s a summary of the essential compliance rules for each framework :
CCPA compliance rules
- Create clear and concise privacy policies outlining data collection and use practices
- Give consumers the right to opt-out
- Respond to consumer requests to access, delete and correct their personal information
- Implement reasonable security measures for consumers’ personal data protection
- Never discriminate against consumers who exercise their CCPA rights
GDPR compliance rules
- Obtain explicit and informed consent for data processing activities
- Implement technical and organisational controls to safeguard personal data
- Designate a Data Protection Officer (DPO) if necessary
- Perform data protection impact assessments (DPIAs) for high-risk processing activities
- Maintain records of processing activities
- Promptly report data breaches to supervisory authorities
Navigating the CCPA and GDPR with confidence
Understanding the nuances of the CCPA and GDPR is crucial for businesses operating in the US and Europe. These regulations significantly impact data collection and analytics practices.
Implementing robust data security practices and prioritising privacy and compliance are essential to avoid severe penalties and build trust with today’s privacy-conscious consumers.
Privacy-centric analytics platforms like Matomo enable businesses to collect, analyse and use data responsibly and transparently, extracting valuable insights while maintaining compliance with both CCPA and GDPR requirements.
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ffmpeg produces duplicate pts with "wallclock_as_timestamps 1" option on MKV
15 avril 2024, par Jax2171I need to get real time reference of every keyframe captured by an IP camera. The
-wallclock_as_timestamps 1
option seems to do the trick for us, however we are forced to replace the TS output container with MKV to get a correct PTS epoch value1712996356.833000
.

Here is the ffmpeg command used :


ffmpeg -report -use_wallclock_as_timestamps 1 -rtsp_transport tcp -i rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0 -c:v copy -c:a aac -copyts -f matroska -y rec.mkv



The capture process runs without any relevant worning or error messages.


However, playing the captured video with any player shows very short and evident but very annoying lags. Upon investigation I discovered that many frame PTSs have the same value. The command I used to show duplicate PTSs is as follows :


ffprobe -v error -show_entries frame=pkt_pts_time -select_streams v -of csv=p=0 rec.mkv | sort | uniq -d



On a recording of about 10 minutes the result of the duplicate PTS is the following :


1713086493.367000
1713086493.368000
1713086493.370000
1713086493.372000
1713086543.714000
1713086558.793000
1713086558.817000
1713086558.872000
1713086561.780000
1713086564.642000
1713086564.657000
1713086564.778000
1713086565.794000
...



I'm not sure if the lag problem is caused by this, however the problem does not occur with the TS container, which however I cannot use due to the PTS values being roundly 33 bit.


The
-vsync 0
or-vsync 2
options on input or output didn't help.

This is the log using the
-report
option :

ffmpeg started on 2024-04-15 at 09:04:38
Report written to "ffmpeg-20240415-090438.log"
Log level: 48
Command line:
ffmpeg -report -stats -hide_banner -use_wallclock_as_timestamps 1 -rtsp_transport tcp -i "rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0" -c:v copy -c:a aac -copyts -f matroska -y rec.mkv
Splitting the commandline.
Reading option '-report' ... matched as option 'report' (generate a report) with argument '1'.
Reading option '-stats' ... matched as option 'stats' (print progress report during encoding) with argument '1'.
Reading option '-hide_banner' ... matched as option 'hide_banner' (do not show program banner) with argument '1'.
Reading option '-use_wallclock_as_timestamps' ... matched as AVOption 'use_wallclock_as_timestamps' with argument '1'.
Reading option '-rtsp_transport' ... matched as AVOption 'rtsp_transport' with argument 'tcp'.
Reading option '-i' ... matched as input url with argument 'rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0'.
Reading option '-c:v' ... matched as option 'c' (codec name) with argument 'copy'.
Reading option '-c:a' ... matched as option 'c' (codec name) with argument 'aac'.
Reading option '-copyts' ... matched as option 'copyts' (copy timestamps) with argument '1'.
Reading option '-f' ... matched as option 'f' (force format) with argument 'matroska'.
Reading option '-y' ... matched as option 'y' (overwrite output files) with argument '1'.
Reading option 'rec.mkv' ... matched as output url.
Finished splitting the commandline.
Parsing a group of options: global .
Applying option report (generate a report) with argument 1.
Applying option stats (print progress report during encoding) with argument 1.
Applying option hide_banner (do not show program banner) with argument 1.
Applying option copyts (copy timestamps) with argument 1.
Applying option y (overwrite output files) with argument 1.
Successfully parsed a group of options.
Parsing a group of options: input url rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0.
Successfully parsed a group of options.
Opening an input file: rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0.
[tcp @ 0x1646660] No default whitelist set
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Original list of addresses:
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Address 192.168.5.21 port 554
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Interleaved list of addresses:
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Address 192.168.5.21 port 554
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Starting connection attempt to 192.168.5.21 port 554
[tcp @ 0x1646660] Successfully connected to 192.168.5.21 port 554
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] SDP:
v=0
o=- 2251950012 2251950012 IN IP4 0.0.0.0
s=Media Server
c=IN IP4 0.0.0.0
t=0 0
a=control:*
a=packetization-supported:DH
a=rtppayload-supported:DH
a=range:npt=now-
a=x-packetization-supported:IV
a=x-rtppayload-supported:IV
m=video 0 RTP/AVP 96
a=control:trackID=0
a=framerate:25.000000
a=rtpmap:96 H264/90000
a=fmtp:96 packetization-mode=1;profile-level-id=4D4028;sprop-parameter-sets=Z01AKKaAeAIn5ZuAgICgAAADACAAAAZQgAA=,aO48gAA=
a=recvonly
m=audio 0 RTP/AVP 97
a=control:trackID=1
a=rtpmap:97 MPEG4-GENERIC/16000
a=fmtp:97 streamtype=5;profile-level-id=1;mode=AAC-hbr;sizelength=13;indexlength=3;indexdeltalength=3;config=1408
a=recvonly

[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] video codec set to: h264
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] RTP Packetization Mode: 1
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] RTP Profile IDC: 4d Profile IOP: 40 Level: 28
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] Extradata set to 0x164af98 (size: 39)
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] audio codec set to: aac
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] audio samplerate set to: 16000
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] audio channels set to: 1
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] setting jitter buffer size to 0
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] setting jitter buffer size to 0
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] hello state=0
Failed to parse interval end specification ''
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 7(SPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 8(PPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 7(SPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 8(PPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 7(SPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 8(PPS), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 5(IDR), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] Format yuvj420p chosen by get_format().
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] Reinit context to 1920x1088, pix_fmt: yuvj420p
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[h264 @ 0x164ab30] nal_unit_type: 1(Coded slice of a non-IDR picture), nal_ref_idc: 3
[rtsp @ 0x1645e70] All info found
Input #0, rtsp, from 'rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0':
 Metadata:
 title : Media Server
 Duration: N/A, start: 1713164678.794625, bitrate: N/A
 Stream #0:0, 22, 1/90000: Video: h264 (Main), yuvj420p(pc, bt709, progressive), 1920x1080, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 90k tbn, 50 tbc
 Stream #0:1, 15, 1/16000: Audio: aac (LC), 16000 Hz, mono, fltp
Successfully opened the file.
Parsing a group of options: output url rec.mkv.
Applying option c:v (codec name) with argument copy.
Applying option c:a (codec name) with argument aac.
Applying option f (force format) with argument matroska.
Successfully parsed a group of options.
Opening an output file: rec.mkv.
[file @ 0x1699f30] Setting default whitelist 'file,crypto,data'
Successfully opened the file.
Stream mapping:
 Stream #0:0 -> #0:0 (copy)
 Stream #0:1 -> #0:1 (aac (native) -> aac (native))
Press [q] to stop, [?] for help
cur_dts is invalid st:0 (0) [init:1 i_done:0 finish:0] (this is harmless if it occurs once at the start per stream)
cur_dts is invalid st:1 (0) [init:0 i_done:0 finish:0] (this is harmless if it occurs once at the start per stream)
detected 4 logical cores
[graph_0_in_0_1 @ 0x1682bb0] Setting 'time_base' to value '1/16000'
[graph_0_in_0_1 @ 0x1682bb0] Setting 'sample_rate' to value '16000'
[graph_0_in_0_1 @ 0x1682bb0] Setting 'sample_fmt' to value 'fltp'
[graph_0_in_0_1 @ 0x1682bb0] Setting 'channel_layout' to value '0x4'
[graph_0_in_0_1 @ 0x1682bb0] tb:1/16000 samplefmt:fltp samplerate:16000 chlayout:0x4
[format_out_0_1 @ 0x187f2e0] Setting 'sample_fmts' to value 'fltp'
[format_out_0_1 @ 0x187f2e0] Setting 'sample_rates' to value '96000|88200|64000|48000|44100|32000|24000|22050|16000|12000|11025|8000|7350'
[AVFilterGraph @ 0x164fd70] query_formats: 4 queried, 9 merged, 0 already done, 0 delayed
[matroska @ 0x169c330] get_metadata_duration returned: 0
Output #0, matroska, to 'rec.mkv':
 Metadata:
 title : Media Server
 encoder : Lavf58.45.100
 Stream #0:0, 0, 1/1000: Video: h264 (Main) (H264 / 0x34363248), yuvj420p(pc, bt709, progressive), 1920x1080, q=2-31, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 1k tbn, 90k tbc
 Stream #0:1, 0, 1/1000: Audio: aac (LC) ([255][0][0][0] / 0x00FF), 16000 Hz, mono, fltp, 69 kb/s
 Metadata:
 encoder : Lavc58.91.100 aac
cur_dts is invalid st:0 (0) [init:1 i_done:0 finish:0] (this is harmless if it occurs once at the start per stream)
cur_dts is invalid st:1 (0) [init:1 i_done:0 finish:0] (this is harmless if it occurs once at the start per stream)
cur_dts is invalid st:0 (0) [init:1 i_done:0 finish:0] (this is harmless if it occurs once at the start per stream)
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Starting new cluster with timestamp 1713164678731 at offset 770 bytes
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 581 with pts 1713164678731, dts 1713164678731, duration 64 at relative offset 14 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 517 with pts 1713164678795, dts 1713164678795, duration 64 at relative offset 602 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 376900 with pts 1713164678872, dts 1713164678872, duration 40 at relative offset 1126 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8172 with pts 1713164678912, dts 1713164678912, duration 40 at relative offset 378034 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 672 with pts 1713164678912, dts 1713164678912, duration 64 at relative offset 386213 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 550 with pts 1713164679177, dts 1713164679177, duration 64 at relative offset 386892 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7654 with pts 1713164679178, dts 1713164679178, duration 40 at relative offset 387449 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7483 with pts 1713164679213, dts 1713164679213, duration 40 at relative offset 395110 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7703 with pts 1713164679242, dts 1713164679242, duration 40 at relative offset 402600 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 565 with pts 1713164679242, dts 1713164679242, duration 64 at relative offset 410310 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7650 with pts 1713164679271, dts 1713164679271, duration 40 at relative offset 410882 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 585 with pts 1713164679271, dts 1713164679271, duration 64 at relative offset 418539 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8682 with pts 1713164679301, dts 1713164679301, duration 40 at relative offset 419131 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8888 with pts 1713164679330, dts 1713164679330, duration 40 at relative offset 427820 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 506 with pts 1713164679330, dts 1713164679330, duration 64 at relative offset 436715 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8019 with pts 1713164679360, dts 1713164679360, duration 40 at relative offset 437228 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7919 with pts 1713164679361, dts 1713164679361, duration 40 at relative offset 445254 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7822 with pts 1713164679361, dts 1713164679361, duration 40 at relative offset 453180 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 699 with pts 1713164679361, dts 1713164679361, duration 64 at relative offset 461009 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 619 with pts 1713164679361, dts 1713164679361, duration 64 at relative offset 461715 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7768 with pts 1713164679362, dts 1713164679362, duration 40 at relative offset 462341 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8469 with pts 1713164679362, dts 1713164679362, duration 40 at relative offset 470116 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 601 with pts 1713164679362, dts 1713164679362, duration 64 at relative offset 478592 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 559 with pts 1713164679363, dts 1713164679363, duration 64 at relative offset 479200 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8265 with pts 1713164679366, dts 1713164679366, duration 40 at relative offset 479766 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7766 with pts 1713164679406, dts 1713164679406, duration 40 at relative offset 488038 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 531 with pts 1713164679415, dts 1713164679415, duration 64 at relative offset 495811 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7753 with pts 1713164679446, dts 1713164679446, duration 40 at relative offset 496349 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8274 with pts 1713164679486, dts 1713164679486, duration 40 at relative offset 504109 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 569 with pts 1713164679496, dts 1713164679496, duration 64 at relative offset 512390 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 8445 with pts 1713164679526, dts 1713164679526, duration 40 at relative offset 512966 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 522 with pts 1713164679535, dts 1713164679535, duration 64 at relative offset 521418 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7922 with pts 1713164679566, dts 1713164679566, duration 40 at relative offset 521947 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7954 with pts 1713164679606, dts 1713164679606, duration 40 at relative offset 529876 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 503 with pts 1713164679615, dts 1713164679615, duration 64 at relative offset 537837 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 11167 with pts 1713164679646, dts 1713164679646, duration 40 at relative offset 538347 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 503 with pts 1713164679655, dts 1713164679655, duration 64 at relative offset 549521 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 10534 with pts 1713164679686, dts 1713164679686, duration 40 at relative offset 550031 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7607 with pts 1713164679726, dts 1713164679726, duration 40 at relative offset 560572 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 478 with pts 1713164679772, dts 1713164679772, duration 64 at relative offset 568186 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7842 with pts 1713164679774, dts 1713164679774, duration 40 at relative offset 568671 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 9862 with pts 1713164679806, dts 1713164679806, duration 40 at relative offset 576520 in cluster at offset 770. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Starting new cluster with timestamp 1713164679815 at offset 587166 bytes
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 449 with pts 1713164679815, dts 1713164679815, duration 64 at relative offset 14 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 379456 with pts 1713164679870, dts 1713164679870, duration 40 at relative offset 470 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 415 with pts 1713164679903, dts 1713164679903, duration 64 at relative offset 379934 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7008 with pts 1713164679905, dts 1713164679905, duration 40 at relative offset 380356 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6917 with pts 1713164679925, dts 1713164679925, duration 40 at relative offset 387371 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 513 with pts 1713164679935, dts 1713164679935, duration 64 at relative offset 394295 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7111 with pts 1713164679966, dts 1713164679966, duration 40 at relative offset 394815 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 753 with pts 1713164679975, dts 1713164679975, duration 64 at relative offset 401933 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7091 with pts 1713164680006, dts 1713164680006, duration 40 at relative offset 402693 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7045 with pts 1713164680045, dts 1713164680045, duration 40 at relative offset 409791 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 659 with pts 1713164680055, dts 1713164680055, duration 64 at relative offset 416843 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6983 with pts 1713164680086, dts 1713164680086, duration 40 at relative offset 417509 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6932 with pts 1713164680127, dts 1713164680127, duration 40 at relative offset 424499 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
frame= 35 fps=0.0 q=-1.0 size= 512kB time=475879:04:40.20 bitrate= 0.0kbits/s speed=3.35e+09x 
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 691 with pts 1713164680135, dts 1713164680135, duration 64 at relative offset 431438 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6990 with pts 1713164680166, dts 1713164680166, duration 40 at relative offset 432136 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 651 with pts 1713164680176, dts 1713164680176, duration 64 at relative offset 439133 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7046 with pts 1713164680206, dts 1713164680206, duration 40 at relative offset 439791 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7130 with pts 1713164680246, dts 1713164680246, duration 40 at relative offset 446844 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 601 with pts 1713164680255, dts 1713164680255, duration 64 at relative offset 453981 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 7205 with pts 1713164680286, dts 1713164680286, duration 40 at relative offset 454589 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 561 with pts 1713164680295, dts 1713164680295, duration 64 at relative offset 461801 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6936 with pts 1713164680326, dts 1713164680326, duration 40 at relative offset 462369 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6822 with pts 1713164680366, dts 1713164680366, duration 40 at relative offset 469312 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 621 with pts 1713164680375, dts 1713164680375, duration 64 at relative offset 476141 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6845 with pts 1713164680405, dts 1713164680405, duration 40 at relative offset 476769 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6848 with pts 1713164680445, dts 1713164680445, duration 40 at relative offset 483621 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 588 with pts 1713164680455, dts 1713164680455, duration 64 at relative offset 490476 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6828 with pts 1713164680486, dts 1713164680486, duration 40 at relative offset 491071 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 546 with pts 1713164680495, dts 1713164680495, duration 64 at relative offset 497906 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6845 with pts 1713164680526, dts 1713164680526, duration 40 at relative offset 498459 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6924 with pts 1713164680566, dts 1713164680566, duration 40 at relative offset 505311 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 508 with pts 1713164680576, dts 1713164680576, duration 64 at relative offset 512242 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6844 with pts 1713164680606, dts 1713164680606, duration 40 at relative offset 512757 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
frame= 48 fps= 47 q=-1.0 size= 512kB time=475879:04:40.72 bitrate= 0.0kbits/s speed=1.66e+09x 
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 587 with pts 1713164680615, dts 1713164680615, duration 64 at relative offset 519608 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6859 with pts 1713164680645, dts 1713164680645, duration 40 at relative offset 520202 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6855 with pts 1713164680686, dts 1713164680686, duration 40 at relative offset 527068 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 573 with pts 1713164680695, dts 1713164680695, duration 64 at relative offset 533930 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6881 with pts 1713164680726, dts 1713164680726, duration 40 at relative offset 534510 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 10773 with pts 1713164680766, dts 1713164680766, duration 40 at relative offset 541398 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 520 with pts 1713164680775, dts 1713164680775, duration 64 at relative offset 552178 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6923 with pts 1713164680805, dts 1713164680805, duration 40 at relative offset 552705 in cluster at offset 587166. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Starting new cluster with timestamp 1713164680815 at offset 1146808 bytes
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 580 with pts 1713164680815, dts 1713164680815, duration 64 at relative offset 14 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 380085 with pts 1713164680864, dts 1713164680864, duration 40 at relative offset 601 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 9916 with pts 1713164680896, dts 1713164680896, duration 40 at relative offset 380694 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 541 with pts 1713164680901, dts 1713164680901, duration 64 at relative offset 390617 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 5877 with pts 1713164680925, dts 1713164680925, duration 40 at relative offset 391165 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 529 with pts 1713164680935, dts 1713164680935, duration 64 at relative offset 397049 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 2, keyframe 1
[matroska @ 0x169c330] Writing block of size 6661 with pts 1713164680966, dts 1713164680966, duration 40 at relative offset 397585 in cluster at offset 1146808. TrackNumber 1, keyframe 0
[matroska @ 0x169c330] end duration = 1713164681006
[matroska @ 0x169c330] stream 0 end duration = 1713164681006
[matroska @ 0x169c330] stream 1 end duration = 1713164680999
frame= 54 fps= 42 q=-1.0 Lsize= 1515kB time=475879:04:40.99 bitrate= 0.0kbits/s speed=1.33e+09x 
video:1493kB audio:20kB subtitle:0kB other streams:0kB global headers:0kB muxing overhead: 0.099897%
Input file #0 (rtsp://user:password1@192.168.5.21/cam/realmonitor?channel=1channel1[1]=1subtype=0):
 Input stream #0:0 (video): 54 packets read (1529156 bytes); 
 Input stream #0:1 (audio): 35 packets read (9268 bytes); 35 frames decoded (35840 samples); 
 Total: 89 packets (1538424 bytes) demuxed
Output file #0 (rec.mkv):
 Output stream #0:0 (video): 54 packets muxed (1529156 bytes); 
 Output stream #0:1 (audio): 35 frames encoded (35840 samples); 36 packets muxed (20446 bytes); 
 Total: 90 packets (1549602 bytes) muxed
35 frames successfully decoded, 0 decoding errors
[AVIOContext @ 0x1667620] Statistics: 2 seeks, 7 writeouts
[aac @ 0x1673880] Qavg: 142.738
Exiting normally, received signal 15.



In this short 3 second capture the duplicate timestamps are
1713164679.361000
and1713164679.362000
.

How can I solve this problem ? What different approach could I use to achieve this goal ?


Thanks in advance.


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Revision 32594 : plugins en minuscules, et alias pour les noms de sites
1er novembre 2009, par fil@… — Logplugins en minuscules, et alias pour les noms de sites